Trump’s Agenda Will Be at Risk If Congress Passes Big Spending Bill in December
Congress returns this week for its lame-duck session—that period of time between November and the end of the year where accountability in Washington is at its lowest.
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Congress returns this week for its lame-duck session—that period of time between November and the end of the year where accountability in Washington is at its lowest.
Obama predicted that his successor might keep some of his major legacy items such as the Iran nuclear deal, the Paris climate agreement, and potentially even Obamacare, stating that President-elect Donald Trump isn’t ideological.
Here are four key things about my generation that our newly elected leaders would do well to consider.
Liberal political activist Michael Moore defended white Trump supporters on MSNBC’s Morning Joe, saying, “they’re not racist.”
A gay website announces, “Who’s happy Trump won? The Klan, Nazis and anti-immigrant activists worldwide,” explaining that “racists, homophobes, Islamophobes, haters and anti-semites are genuinely ecstatic over his election.”
Earlier this week, Conservative Review Editor-in-Chief Mark Levin reviewed the agenda for the first 100 days of Donald Trump’s presidency.
Watching Hillary Clinton’s concession speech, I was struck by how serene she appeared to be. There was no bitterness, no veiled barbs at Donald Trump or his deplorables, no insults directed at average Americans, not even any harmless snark. This didn’t seem like the Clinton we’ve all come to know and love loathe. What was going on here?
It’s no secret that Donald Trump is as much of a blank slate on policy as anyone who’s ever been elected president.
As the post-election dust settles, the incoming Trump administration now has the chance to consider some immediate policy goals for the new year.
Joe Miller earned the Libertarian Party (L.P.) its highest-ever vote percentage in a federal Senate race this week, with his 30 percent in Alaska.
